Cover image: CAP 2026 and Omnibus III

CAP 2026 is here — what the Omnibus III package really means for precision farmers

The 2026 CAP application window runs until 15 May. In parallel, the EU simplification package agreed in December 2025 (“Omnibus III”) is being transposed into national law. Less red tape does not mean less documentation — obligations simply shift.

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At a glance

If you work digitally, you gain time and predictability in 2026. If you do not, you will fight your way through a year of transition deadlines.

Related on Xsupra:

Subsidy support · AI assistant Alora

What is this about?

After two years of farmer protests, the EU agreed a broad relief package in December 2025. The core: fewer inspections, more flexibility, new crisis payments. Member states are transposing it into national law; it affects almost every farm that receives direct payments.

The main 2026 changes in brief:

  • Reference-date rule for arable land: areas classified as arable on 1 January 2026 keep that status even if they are not ploughed regularly. Member states decide whether to apply this or stick to the previous five-/seven-year rhythm.
  • Crisis payments for extreme weather: member states may compensate active farmers after natural disasters, drought, or storm damage.
  • Fewer inspections and more generous exceptions for organic farms.
  • More legal certainty on GAEC standards — with slower implementation where that is workable.

That is the theory. In practice, rules change faster than the forms.

The uncomfortable truth: fewer rules ≠ fewer proofs

Reading the Brussels messaging, you might think the 2026 application will run itself. It will not. Because:

  1. You must still document what you do. Rotations, application rates, cover crops, buffer strips — all of it stays auditable.
  2. Inspection depth may fall, but monitoring density does not. Satellite-supported area monitoring (AMS) is standard. Inconsistencies surface quickly.
  3. Crisis payments are application-based. After weather damage you must prove the loss — ideally with historical data showing the “before” condition.

That is where farms split in 2026: those with digital, versioned field data, and those who restart every spring with spreadsheets and folders.

Four places where 2026 wastes concrete time

We spoke with more than 100 farms across the EU. These four themes keep returning in spring 2026:

1. Checking the reference-date rule — but how?

If you want to secure “reference-date arable” status in 2026, you need clear proof of use. Paper files, scattered parcels across states, and changing tenants turn this into detective work.

2. Documenting GAEC compliance

Buffers, soil cover, rotations — the basics remain. Evidence is increasingly checked against satellite signals. NDVI history for your fields is no longer a nice-to-have.

3. Crisis documentation for extreme weather

Crisis aid needs a before-and-after comparison. Without satellite history you argue against the agency’s memory, not with facts.

4. Evaluating eco-schemes economically

Not every eco-scheme pays on every field. If you do not model first, you lose either premium or yield. Model-based soil maps show where a measure actually makes sense.

How Xsupra simplifies the 2026 application in practice

Xsupra is not software that fills in the CAP form for you. Established systems such as national web applications still do that. Xsupra supplies the evidence base you lean on while doing it.

Concretely:

  • Digital field book with history: every operation, application, and scouting note is stored per field. For the application you ask Alora: “Which cover crop was on field 7 in 2024?” — and get an answer in seconds.
  • Satellite history since 2018: Sentinel-2 indices available retrospectively — useful for reference-date evidence, crisis claims, and GAEC documentation.
  • Soil zones instead of grids: modelled soil property maps show real spatial differences — helpful not only for fertilisation but for deciding where eco-schemes pay off.
  • Morning audio briefing: Alora summarises what matters today, including deadlines, on the drive to the field.

What we see on customer farms: roughly half the time on the CAP application, double the documentation quality — which pays off at on-farm inspections.

What you should do now

If you read this far, you probably have an application open or almost ready. Three practical steps:

  1. Consolidate field data. Before submitting 2026, check that geometries, rotations, and measures are complete and consistent. Nothing costs more time than late corrections.
  2. Decide deliberately on the reference-date rule. Talk to your adviser about whether the new option helps your farm — it depends heavily on rotation and grassland share.
  3. Secure historical data. Crisis aid and future checks need multi-year records. The earlier you digitise, the more history you have when you truly need it.

Bottom line

2026 is not an easy year — but it is decisive. Omnibus III brings real relief but shifts responsibility to the farm. Farms that rely on gut feel and paper will feel that burden. Farms that work digitally, field-specific, and with history can use the new room to manoeuvre.

Ready to approach the 2026 application in a structured way?

Talk to us about your farmno obligation, no sales pressure.

New customers get 80% off the first month with code DIESELKRISE2026.

Sources: European Commission, Omnibus III agreement December 2025 | agrarheute.com, November 2025 | DVS CAP network, March 2026 | Bavarian Farmers’ Association, January 2026

AuthorXsupra Editorial
Date16 April 2026
Read time7 min read
CategoryPolicy & funding

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